Distressed teenagers walk away from the Ozar Hatorah jewish school in Toulouse, France, 19 March 2012, where a man opened fire and killed a 30-years old teacher and three children aged 6, 3 and 10. (Credit: EPA/MAXPPP/XAVIER DE FENOYL)

Four people were killed at a Jewish school shooting on Monday in Toulouse, France, sending shockwaves throughout the global Jewish community.

An anonymous, black-clad gunman on a motorcycle stopped near Ozar Hatorah Jewish day school as students were entering around 8 a.m., and opened fire on them with an automatic rifle. He did not stop shooting until his weapon jammed, and then he replaced it with a revolver.

Toulouse prosecutor Michel Valet said the man “shot at everything that moved,” chasing down some of the children and even grabbing a little girl by the hair and executing her. Soon afterward the shooter got back onto his motorcycle, believed to be a Yamaha, and fled the scene. A school employee who gave his name as Elhanan told Israel Radio that, “The attacker knew exactly who he was shooting at.”

The victims were Yonatan Sandler, 30, from the Kiryat Yovel neighborhood of Jerusalem, along with his two sons Aryeh, 3, and Gavriel Yissacher, 6, and the 8-year-old daughter of the school’s principal, Miriam Montesango. Israeli Foreign Ministry Spokesman Yigal Palmor said the victims are being buried in Israel.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Monday that the attack was an “abominable drama” and a “frightening tragedy.”

According to police, three former French paratroopers are suspected of the crime and a search is under way to find them. The three were reportedly discharged from the military after the discovery of a photo showing them posing with a Nazi flag and with their arms raised in a Nazi salute.

The suspects were also said to have a possible connection with two previous attacks. On March 11, a French paratrooper was murdered in Toulouse by a man who allegedly offered to buy a motorcycle the soldier was looking to sell. Four days later, two other paratroopers were murdered and a third was seriously wounded as they were withdrawing money from an automated teller machine in the city of Montauban.

A primary piece of evidence that could indicate a link between the incidents is that a .45-caliber handgun was used in all three attacks. In addition, the same model of motorcycle used in Monday’s shooting, a Yamaha TMAX, was used in the other incidents.

World Jewish leaders react

Chief Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt, president of the Conference of European Rabbis, called on French authorities “to take all steps to ensure that the perpetrator of this act is found and brought to justice,” adding that the shooting “is indicative of a society where intolerance is allowed to fester.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said a “strong murderous anti-Semitic motive” for the attack cannot be ruled out, adding that Israel “will do everything” to help Sarkozy and his government find the killer.

The New York Police Department (NYPD) dispatched extra patrols to more than 50 locations around New York City following the news of the school shooting in France, the Associated Press reported. Rabbi Joseph Potasnik, executive vice president of the New York Board of Rabbis, told JointMedia News Service that the Jewish community’s relationship with the NYPD “is extremely strong.”

“Synagogues could not have better protection,” he said.

Potasnik said the New York Board of Rabbis sought an immediate meeting with French officials to express its “outrage.”

Speaking on behalf of the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations, President Richard Stone and Executive Vice Chairman Malcolm Hoenlein said, “We are outraged at this savage act against schoolchildren who were waiting outside their school building at the beginning of the day. Not only did the shooter attack children at the entrance to the building but he also chased them inside. ... We stand in solidarity with the Jewish community of Toulouse and the entire Jewish community of France.”

The Orthodox Union (OU) also expressed solidarity with the French Jewish community, saying, “All Jews feel responsible for each other, and never more keenly when any of our brethren come under attack for no reason except that they are Jews. The horrific murders today of four Jews in Toulouse, France, were an attack on all Jews everywhere."

In an interview with JointMedia News Service, OU Managing Director Rabbi Stephen Burg said, “To see something so coldhearted done to children scares us. It makes you realize that there are those capable of doing something like this. Nothing is off limits.”

Burg said all OU-associated synagogues and schools have safety protocols in place. The greatest threat, he said, is that of “copycats.”

“It is the greatest fear in the world,” he said. “The lone wolf is the most dangerous — anyone can pick up a gun.”

Security in Toulouse

The Jews of Toulouse in southern France had so little to fear that six months ago, they decided they did not need a guard at the entrance to the Ozar Hatorah Jewish day school, where Monday’s shooting took place.

“Everyone thought the security cameras and the iron door were enough,” a Jewish resident of the city told Israel Hayom on Monday. “A little after 8 a.m. that day, their confidence turned out to be exaggerated, and gave way to deep shock.”

The OU’s Burg cautioned that, “People need to be vigilant and to know what security measures are in place. Keep asking: What are we doing to keep our communities safe?”

In that vein, the Jewish Federations of North America-affiliated Secure Community Network (SCN) — which partners with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and 56 major Jewish organizations — provides free security training at www.scnus.org (click the “Enter” section on the home page).

SCN’s 24/7 online training includes information on how to respond to an active shooter, security awareness, how to handle a suspicious package and how to answer a bomb call.